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Brand Africa announces the inaugural Africa CMO 100

Women, Financial Services, Telco and Southern African CMOs dominate the list of Africa’s 100 Most Influential Brand Builders

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, 30 march 2026 -/African Media Agency(AMA)/ – Brand Africa, in partnership with African Business magazine, MIPAD (Most Influential People of African Descent) and the African Media Agency, today launched the inaugural Africa CMO 100 (ACMO100) — recognising the 100 most impactful marketing, brand and reputation leaders shaping Africa’s story, identity and prosperity.

The full list and in-depth analysis will be featured in the April 2026 issue of African Business, available first week of April, and across partner platforms at brandafrica.net, africabusiness.com, mipad.org and africanmediaagency.com.

Brand Africa’s independent research over 15 years has consistently found that while 68% of Africans believe in Africa, only 18% of the brands they most admire are African. ACMO100 exists to recognise and connect the leaders best placed to change that.
“CMOs and senior brand leaders are among the most powerful architects of Africa’s future. Through strategy, stewardship and influence, they shape narratives, build trust, and guide the preferences of hundreds of millions of people. ACMO100 exists to recognise, celebrate and connect these leaders.”
— Thebe Ikalafeng — Founder and Chairman, Brand Africa

The inaugural ACMO100 honourees will be celebrated at Brand Africa Week, Addis Ababa, 22–26 May 2026.

ACMO100: AFRICA’S 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL MARKETING LEADERS

One hundred leaders across six African economic regions — including the diaspora — spanning twenty countries and more than 50 distinct role titles. The list is ordered alphabetically by country of origin. All 100 honourees hold equal standing. The list carries no internal ranking.

THREE FINDINGS FROM THE INAUGURAL LIST

01 — A Female-Majority Profession. 62% of honourees are women — a majority across every region. The diaspora cohort is 75% female; East Africa reaches 72%; North Africa, 71%. In Africa, women are not emerging talent waiting for their moment: they are running marketing for the continent’s most consequential brands.

02 — Finance and Telecoms Dominate. Financial services — banking, insurance and fintech — leads with 31 honourees, reflecting the scale of Africa’s financial inclusion wave and the premium brand trust commands in markets where millions are transacting formally for the first time. Telecoms and technology account for a further 20. Together, these two sectors represent more than half the list — and the deepest pools of marketing talent on the continent.

03 — Three Hubs, and a Rising Fourth. Southern Africa leads with 39 honourees, anchored by Johannesburg — the marketing capital of the continent. West Africa contributes 20, with Nigeria’s 17 entries anchoring a market of extraordinary commercial depth. East Africa’s 17 are shaped by Kenya’s Safaricom ecosystem and Nairobi’s competitive consumer market. The most instructive story is North Africa: 14 entries, with Morocco alone accounting for seven — more than Egypt and Algeria combined — signalling Casablanca’s emergence as a new continental marketing hub.

Southern Africa — 39 Honourees
Anchored by South Africa, which accounts for 31% of leaders by country of origin. Cohort: Abey Mokgwatsane, Alison Hastings Badenhorst, Andisa Ntsubane, Andrea Quaye, Beyers Van De Merwe, Bronwyn Pretorius, Bunmi Adeniba, Chantal Sombonos-Van Tonder, Doug Place, Dries Van der Sandt, Dudu Mokholo, Faye Mfikwe, Firoze Bhorat, Francois Viviers, Gugu Mthembu, Happy Ngidi, Ilze Bylos, Ivan Serra (Mozambique), Jessica Motaung, Khensani Nobanda, Levie Nkunika (Malawi), Lorraine De Graaf, Lucia Maseko, Matilda Nyathi (Zimbabwe), Mmaphuti Rankapole, Mosala Phillips, Mphothe Elizabeth Mokwena, Mzamo Masito, Nontokozo Madonsela, Raquel Capitão (Angola), Sithembile Ndaba, Sobhuza Ngwenya (Malawi), Suneeta Motala (Mauritius), Sydney Nhlanhla Mbhele, Thabang Ramogase, Tim Ekandjo (Namibia), Vaughan Croeser, Vilosha Soni and Vuyokazi Henda.

West Africa — 20 Honourees
Nigeria’s 17 entries anchor a market of extraordinary commercial depth. Cohort: Adewunmi Desalu, Amaechi Michael Okobi, Anthony Chiejina, Bamise Oyegbami, Bolanle Kehinde-Lawal, Cherry Eromosele, Chinedu Zephaniah, Diran Olojo, Emeka Oparah, Idemudia Dima-Okojie, Ifeoma Agu, Ilyas Kazeem, Julien Zayro (Côte d’Ivoire), Maureen Ifada, Noel Kojo-Ganson (Ghana), Oluyomi Moses, Onyinye Ikenna-Emeka, Sandra Handou Koné (Côte d’Ivoire), Sarah Agha and Tolu Alero Ladipo.

East Africa — 17 Honourees
Anchored by Kenya at nine, shaped by the Safaricom ecosystem and Nairobi’s competitive consumer market. Cohort: Abdulkadir Mamma Hussein (Ethiopia), Anne Joy Michira, Catherine Ndungu, Fatema Dewji (Tanzania), Isabelle Kariuki-Rostom, Kitenda Robert Gobii (Uganda), Lemma Yadecha Gudeta (Ethiopia), Martine Gatabazi (Tanzania), Neemarose Singo (Tanzania), Nelly Wangui Wainaina, Ope Lawal, Rosalind Gichuru, Sylvia ElSheikh (Uganda), Vivian Achieng Oyugi, Wangechi Gitahi, Warau Kahoro and Zizwe Awuor Vundla.

North Africa — 14 Honourees
Morocco alone accounts for seven entries — more than Egypt and Algeria combined — reflecting its position as a francophone-Arabic-European commercial crossroads. Cohort: Anne Ezeh (Egypt), El Hadi Mohamed Hamma (Algeria), Fadwa Bisbis, Ghada Hammouda (Egypt), Isabelle Hajri (Algeria), Mahmoud Taha (Egypt), Mehdi Yaroub, Mounir Jazouli, Nadia Rahim Guérin, Sakina El Fares, Salma Bencherif, Salma Hamdouch, Samia Dziri (Algeria) and Shams Adly (Egypt).

Central Africa — 2 Honourees
Bienvenu Mayamonuswa (Democratic Republic of Congo) and Yves Kom (Cameroon).

Diaspora — 8 Honourees
Based in the USA and UAE, running marketing at Visa, Unilever, Doordash and BET Media Group — underscoring the mobility of African-origin talent at the top of the world’s most competitive brand portfolios. Cohort: Dara Treseder, Esi Eggleston Bracey, Frank Cooper III, Kimberly Evans Paige, Kofi Amoo-Gottfried, Linda Kouam, Najoh Tita-Reid and Tarek Abdalla.

THE BAOBAB | ACMO HALL OF FAME

Brand Africa has also announced the inaugural Baobab | ACMO Hall of Fame — honouring a select number of African and diaspora brand leaders whose benchmark careers have made an enduring contribution to Africa’s brand narrative. Named for Africa’s most iconic and enduring tree, the Baobab honours legacy, not a moment. Inaugural recipients: Bozoma Saint John (former Uber and Netflix CMO); Bernice Samuels (retiring MTN Group Executive for Brand and Marketing); Sylvia Mulinge (CEO, MTN Uganda; former Chief Customer Officer, Safaricom); and Souheil Badaa (former CMO, Novartis Group; founder, Tanakoo) — icons whose work has defined, elevated and expanded the possibilities of African-led brand leadership.

BRAND AFRICA WEEK — ADDIS ABABA, 22–26 MAY 2026

The inaugural ACMO100 honourees will be celebrated at Brand Africa Week in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia — the historical capital of the continent — in the week of Africa Day. Brand Africa Week 2026 will bring together the ACMO100 Celebration, the unveiling of the Brand Africa 100 | Africa’s Best Brands® and the Brand Africa Dialogue — planned to be the most impactful convening of continental CMOs in Africa’s history.

“MIPAD exists to celebrate and elevate the most influential people of African descent — and ACMO100 does exactly that for the world of marketing and brand leadership. For the first time, the architects of Africa’s most powerful brands are being recognised on their own terms. That is long overdue, and it matters deeply to the diaspora.”
— Kamil Olufowobi, Founder & Chairman, MIPAD (USA/Nigeria)

THE ACMO METHODOLOGY AND REVIEW COMMITTEE

The ACMO100 selection is governed by a rigorous, three-step process designed to reflect the realities of marketing leadership across a continent where function often outpaces title.

Collation draws on three independent sources: nominations by the ACMO Review Committee; review of the marketing leadership behind brands featured in the Brand Africa 100 | Africa’s Best Brands® and comparable rankings over the preceding three years; and research into CMOs behind award-winning and/or impactful work.

Evaluation applies a consistent set of criteria to every nominee: active leadership in Africa or the diaspora; a minimum of five years in senior marketing decision-making; and standing as the highest-ranking functional marketing, brand or communications leader in their organisation.

Verification and vetting ensures that every name on the list has earned its place through demonstrable impact, influence and integrity — not title or visibility alone.

The list carries no internal ranking. All 100 honourees hold equal standing.

The integrity of ACMO100 is anchored in the independence and calibre of its governance. The ACMO Review Committee is an independent, Africa-wide body of distinguished practitioners with a deep understanding of the marketing and brand industry and its most influential individuals — drawn from every major region of the continent and the diaspora. The Committee is intentionally diverse in discipline, geography and background. It brings together former CMOs now in general management and board roles; founders and chief executives of leading African agencies; editors and publishers of the continent’s foremost business media; heads of national marketing associations; academics and researchers from leading African institutions; and respected independent voices from strategy, creative, media and digital.

Committee members are ineligible for inclusion during their tenure; current CMOs do not participate in nomination or adjudication, ensuring complete independence. The panel spans more than 20 countries across all African regions and the diaspora — its diversity in discipline, geography and seniority is central to the credibility of the process.

Southern Africa: Thulani Sibeko, CEO – COID and Social Insurance, Rand Mutual (RMA) (South Africa); Trevor Ncube, Chairman & Director, Alpha Media Holdings (Zimbabwe); Laz Jacobs, Founder & Executive Director, Paragon TBWA (Namibia); Dr Pepe Marais, Group Chief Creative Officer, Joe Public (South Africa); Sechaba Motsieloa, Co-Founder & Managing Partner, Kansy Group (South Africa); George Damson, President, Institute of Marketing in Malawi; Dr Tumelo Chaka, Managing Executive, The Strategists (South Africa); Christine Ramela (Mozambique); Mwewa Besa, President, Institute of Marketing in Zambia; Brian Yuyi, CEO, Marketing Association of South Africa; Professor Alistair Mokoena, Executive Dean, Johannesburg Business School (South Africa); Dr Tendai Mhiza, CEO, Integra Africa (Zimbabwe); Gillian Rusike, Founder & CEO, Marketers Association of Zimbabwe; Adv Phelane Phomane, Founder & Managing Director, Tangerine Connect (Lesotho); Dale Hefer, CEO, Integrated Marketing Council (South Africa).

West Africa: Seyi Ademola-Adeoye, Senior Research Fellow, Pierrine (Nigeria); Kwame Senou, Executive Director, THOP (Côte d’Ivoire); Steve Babaeko, CEO & Chief Creative Officer, X3M Ideas (Nigeria); Ade Adefeko, Vice President, Corporate & Government Affairs, Olam International (Nigeria); Sharon Mills, Lead Consultant, SMC Consulting (Ghana); Daniel Kojo Soboh, Executive Director, EMY Africa (Ghana).

East Africa: Malik Shaffy Lizinde, Founder & CEO, 63 INC (Rwanda); William Kalombo, Marketing Africa Magazine (Kenya); Melvin Mwakugu, Independent (Kenya); Jacquie Muhati, Deputy Marketing Director, NCBA (Kenya); Barian Shah, Managing Director, Evolution Events (Tanzania); Aron Simeneh, Creative Director, Kin Creatives (Ethiopia); Joseph Kanyamunyu, Chief Executive Director, Publicis Africa Communications (Uganda); Frakline Kibuacha, Marketing Director, GeoPoll (Kenya).

North Africa: Youssef Cheikhi, CEO, Brendz (Morocco); Youssef Othmani, CEO, Gopinion (Algeria); Siham Malek, Managing Director, Integrate Consulting (Morocco).

Diaspora: Omar Ben Yedder, Publisher, African Business (UK/Tunisia); Denver Phiri (UK/Zimbabwe); Kamil Olufowobi, Founder & Chairman, MIPAD (USA/Nigeria); Moky Makura, Executive Director, Africa No Filter (UK/Nigeria); Terhas Asefaw Berhe, Managing Director, Brand Comms (UK/Eritrea); James Woods, Globiq International (UK/Malawi); Akin Naphtal, Founder & CEO, InstinctiveWave Group (UK/Nigeria); Cyrille Djami, Founder & Manager, Comms of Africa (France/Cameroon), and Ndeye Diagne, Chief Client Officer, Kantar (France/Senegal).

“The ACMO Review Committee brings together some of the sharpest and most experienced minds on the continent. Their role is to ensure that every name on the ACMO100 list has truly earned their place through impact, influence and integrity.”
— Omar Ben Yedder — Publisher, African Business

Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of Brand Africa

ABOUT BRAND AFRICA

Brand Africa is the continent’s leading brand-led platform to inspire an African renaissance founded on the conviction that brands drive the growth, reputation and competitiveness of nations. Since 2011, its flagship initiative, the Brand Africa 100 | Africa’s Best Brands®, has tracked brand performance, consumer perception and brand equity across the continent – providing the most authoritative pan-African brand intelligence. Brand Africa convenes leaders, shapes narratives and advances the case for branding as a driver of Africa’s prosperity. www.brand.africa

ABOUT AFRICAN BUSINESS

African Business is Africa’s foremost pan-continental business magazine, providing authoritative journalism, analysis and intelligence on business, finance, trade and policy across Africa and the global African diaspora. Published by IC Publications, it reaches a senior readership of business, government and civil society leaders across Africa and internationally. www.africabusiness.com

ABOUT MIPAD

MIPAD (Most Influential People of African Descent) is a global civil society organisation that recognises, celebrates and networks the most influential people of African descent across the world. Its annual recognition spans business, politics, culture, science and civil society, with a mission to advance the social, economic and political empowerment of people of African descent globally. www.mipad.org

ABOUT AFRICAN MEDIA AGENCY

African Media Agency (AMA) is the trusted pan-African communications agency helping organisations connect with African audiences. Founded by Eloïne Barry, AMA integrates public relations with digital and creative communications to establish clients as market leaders across the continent. AMA’s services span press release distribution, PR strategy, digital creative and media training through its not-for-profit AMA Academy. A member of IPREX and the PRCA. www.africanmediaagency.com

MEDIA CONTACT
Lebogang Serapelwane
| Brand Africa | E: lebogang@brandleadership.com

Eloïne Barry | African Media Agency | E: eloine@africanmediaagency.com

www.brand.africa

The post Brand Africa announces the inaugural Africa CMO 100 appeared first on African Media Agency.

Zachery Ty Bryan Faces Full Sentence for 3 Probation Violations: Report

Zachery Ty Bryan is reportedly facing a full sentence after violating probation three times.

Bryan, 44, appeared in an Oregon court on Monday, December 29, and admitted to the violations, according to the ABC News affiliate station KEZI. The outlet reported that Bryan will be sentenced on February 17. 

The former Home Improvement actor, who lives in the city of Eugene, Oregon, was convicted of domestic violence in Lane County in 2023. Instead of receiving up to 20 months in prison, he was given three years of probation. His probation officer now wants the court to give Bryan a full sentence. 

Us Weekly has reached out to Bryan for comment. 

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Bryan was arrested multiple times over a period of 26 months, per KEZI. Those arrests included three for driving under the influence of intoxicants and two that were out-of-state and violated a travel ban. In early 2025, he was taken into custody for allegedly assaulting his fiancée, Johnnie Faye Cartwright, in South Carolina.

Bryan and Cartwright, 32, were both arrested last month in the Fall Creek area of Oregon.

“On November 29th at about 12:30 p.m., Lane County Sheriff’s deputies responded to a report of reckless endangering in the area of Big Fall Creek Road milepost 5, a popular camping area northeast of Lowell,” The Lane County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement at the time. 

The statement added that Bryan and Cartwright were driving in a pickup truck with their three children when Bryan got out of the car and started walking on the road. 

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“Cartwright then attempted to run over Bryan, crashing the truck with the children inside into the ditch,” the Sheriff’s Office stated. “Bryan was able to move out of the way and avoid injury. No one inside the pickup was injured.”

According to authorities, both Bryan and Cartwright “were impaired.” 

Bryan was arrested for violating probation as a result of the prior assault conviction and released from police custody on December 10. As for Cartwright, she was arraigned on December 1, pleading not guilty to one count of driving under the influence, two counts of recklessly endangering another person and three counts of reckless driving. 

(Bryan has denied the allegations against him. People previously reported that he’d been “cleared.”)

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Per court documents obtained by Us Weekly earlier this month, Cartwright was released, pre-trial, with conditions that included not communicating with Bryan. She was also instructed to use an alcohol monitor. According to KEZI, she will head to trial on February 11. 

Bryan and Cartwright announced their engagement in November 2021. They share a daughter, born in April 2022, and twins born in May 2023. 

Cartwright is a former model and also worked as a jetpack instructor in Newport Beach for three years, per her Facebook profile.

If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, please call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 for confidential support.

Rodney Rogers Dead at 54: NBA Star Remembered for ‘Towering Legacy’

Former NBA star Rodney Rogers has died at age 54.

A news release from his college alma mater, Wake Forest, confirmed that Rogers died on Friday, November 21, of natural causes linked to a 2008 spinal injury. He is survived by his wife, Faye Rogers, and three children: daughters Roddreka and Rydeiah as well as son Rodney Rogers II. (Roddreka is currently an assistant coach for Georgia State women’s basketball, while Rydeiah played basketball at North Carolina State from 2015 to 2019.)

Rogers became paralyzed from the shoulders down following a November 2008 ATV crash near Raleigh, North Carolina, when he accidentally drove into a ditch and flipped over the handlebars.

“Rodney Rogers, an NBA legend who played 12 years in the league, passed away on November 21, 2025, from natural causes related to the spinal cord injury he sustained on November 28, 2008,” his family said in a statement released by Wake Forest. “He made his transition peacefully, surrounded by the endless love of his devoted wife, Faye.”

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Their tribute continued, “A native of Durham, N.C., Rogers leaves behind a towering legacy as one of the most transformative players in program history and an enduring example of courage, generosity, and Pro Humanitate spirit.”

He joined the Wake Forest University basketball team in 1990 and eventually was named the Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year and a First-Team All-American in his final season.

“Rodney Rogers transformed and accelerated the upward trajectory of Wake Forest University as well as Demon Deacons basketball from the moment he signed his letter of intent in the fall of 1989,” Wake Forest’s former athletic director, John Currie, said. “His generational combination of power and grace as a player was exceeded only by the size of his heart. His perseverance and spirit following his accident inspired thousands and embodied the true meaning of Pro Humanitate. Rodney showed us what strength looks like in every chapter of life. Our hearts are with Faye, Roddreka, Rodney II, Rydiah and the entire Rogers family.”

He was drafted as the ninth overall pick by the Denver Nuggets when he turned pro in 1993 and would go on to play for several NBA teams, including a four-year stint for the Los Angeles Clippers. Rogers won the prestigious Sixth Man of the Year Award in 2000 while he was playing for the Phoenix Suns.

GettyImages-2899483 Rodney Rogers Dead at 54
Rodney Rogers in January 2004. Al Bello/Getty Images

In later years, Rogers played for the New Jersey Nets, the New Orleans Hornets and, finally, for the Philadelphia 76ers before leaving the league in 2005.

The NBA released a statement on Saturday, November 22, to recognize Rogers’s unforgettable contributions to the sport of basketball.

“The NBA family is deeply saddened by the passing of Rodney Rogers. Rodney earned the Sixth Man of the Year Award while playing for the Phoenix Suns and was a beloved teammate during his 12-year NBA career,” an NBA statement read. “He will be remembered not only for his achievements on the court but also for the extraordinary resilience, courage and generosity that he demonstrated throughout his life — qualities that inspired so many. We send our heartfelt condolences to Rodney’s wife, Faye, and their family.”

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Former Wake Forest coach Dave Odom remembered Rogers as an “extraordinary talent” who was “every bit as remarkable as a human being.”

“He loved his teammates, he loved his family, he loved Wake Forest and he loved the game of basketball,” Odom recalled. “Every time we visited him, I walked away reminding myself never to complain — because he never did,.”

Odom went on, “He faced life exactly as it came and made the very best of every moment. He was a joy to watch as a basketball player, but he was an even greater man. He shared his strength, his spirit and his life with everyone around him.”

One Chicago Fall Finale Breakdown: Every Cliffhanger Explained

The One Chicago fall finales left Us with a lot of questions after putting multiple lives in jeopardy and teasing a Firehouse 51 shakeup that could change everything.

Chicago Med, Chicago Fire and Chicago P.D.’s respective Wednesday, November 12, cliffhangers have many fans reeling — and we’re explaining them all.

Med kicked off the night by teasing a possible love triangle before diving into a darker story line involving Dr. Caitlin Lenox (Sarah Ramos) and a former patient.

Fire put Kelly Severide (Taylor Kinney) back in touch with his fire investigation self, while one of the rigs in Firehouse 51 faced closing down permanently.

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P.D., for its part, focused on how a new case could be linked to a past killer — and his deranged father.

Scroll down for a complete breakdown of the One Chicago fall finales:

‘Chicago Med’

One Chicago Fall Finale Breakdown Every Cliffhanger Explained Chicago Med
Abrial Bonilla as Med Student Lina Martinez, Sarah Ramos as Dr. Caitlin Lenox. George Burns Jr/NBC

During Med’s fall finale, Dr. John Frost (Darren Barnet) tried and failed to get paramedic Lyla Novak’s (Jocelyn Hudon) phone number before Dr. Naomi Howard (Ashlei Sharpe Chestnut) confessed her feelings for him — even though she admitted they missed their time.

The episode, however, took a darker turn when suspected wife beater Devin Carter (Jack Falahee) returned to the ED with injuries he claimed were from a hockey accident. Dr. Caitlin Lenox (Ramos) suspected that his injuries were actually defensive, meaning his wife, Faye (Olivia Nikkanen), could be in danger.

Earlier this season, Faye was admitted to the hospital and reached out to help after being abused by her husband. She ultimately decided to go home and not file any charges against her spouse, but Devin made it clear to Lenox that he didn’t appreciate her interfering.

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During Wednesday’s episode, Lenox battled a storm to get to Faye’s house while Dr. Mitch Ripley (Luke Mitchell) distracted Devin at the hospital. When she arrived, she located Faye bleeding in the basement unable to move.

After hearing a loud sound, Lenox went upstairs to find the door slamming in the wind. She started to call for help when Devin popped up behind her and knocked her out by hitting her in the head with a gun.

‘Chicago Fire’

One Chicago Fall Finale Breakdown Every Cliffhanger Explained Chicago Fire
Christian Stolte as Randall McHolland. Peter Gordon/NBC

Chicago Fire’s fall finale was focused more on personal breakthroughs and work-related drama.

Viewers learned that Novak (Hudon) has a strained relationship with her siblings, after her sister, Heidi, landed in the hospital for a bad reaction to mixing sleeping pills with grapefruit juice.

Sal Vasquez (Brandon Larracuente), meanwhile, worked his first shift as a paramedic-firefighter with Violet Mikami (Hanako Greensmith), which was a success. After their shift, he was surprised by his crooked cop father, who was released from prison. The tension between the pair was evident as Vasquez’s dad took back his car, leaving his son to bum a ride from Violet.

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While Stella Kidd (Miranda Rae Mayo) was away helping her and Kelly Severide’s (Kinney) foster son get his mom the right medical treatment, Severide assisted with a fire investigation case. While informing a school principal that he was the intended target of a school fire started earlier in the episode, a fire broke out at his apartment — with both Severide and Tom Van Meter (Tim Hopper) inside.

The biggest cliffhanger came when Chief Dom Pascal (Dermot Mulroney) finally had a real date with Chief Annette Davis (Annabeth Gish). During their dinner, Annette revealed that her office decided they need to permanently decommission several engines, including Engine 51, which means new lieutenant Randall “Mouch” McHolland (Christian Stolte) could be out of a job.

‘Chicago P.D.’

One Chicago Fall Finale Breakdown Every Cliffhanger Explained Chicago PD
Arienne Mandi as Eva Imani. Elizabeth Sisson/NBC

Chicago P.D.’s dramatic fall finale kicked off with Sergeant Hank Voight (Jason Beghe) being sent more photos of his childhood hospital stay. One of the pictures was of his father with the words, “Your father the abuser” written on it.

While Voight seemingly tracked the pictures back to Commander Mark Devlin (Joel Murray) — who vowed to get him back for going over his head to get Intelligence reinstated — it wasn’t the main story line.

After Voight’s team responded to a call about a strange man trying to break into a woman’s home, they discovered the man was actually tortured. He had the same injuries on his hand as the victims of Gary Bell (Sam Cass), who killed himself after going on a killing spree earlier this season.

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Voight was convinced Gary’s father, Raymond Bell (Barry Del Sherman), was responsible for the new victim’s death, and did everything possible to prove it. (The team thinks Raymond tortured his son and turned him into the monster he became.)

After slipping Bell’s granddaughter, Julie (Julianna Layne), her phone number, newcomer Eva Imani (Arienne Mandi) got even more invested than Voight in taking down Raymond and saving Julie from his grasp. Once the team found a pattern in Raymond’s alleged hunting ground — and discovered that people just go “missing” on his property — they hit a legal wall that kept them from arresting him.

Eva, however, took matters into her own hands at the end of the episode after receiving a call from Julie. Eva was seen creeping through the Bell home alone at night while searching for Julie. The episode ended with Eva finding Julie’s phone and a loud noise coming from downstairs.

Chicago Med, Chicago Fire and Chicago P.D. return with new episodes on NBC Wednesday, January 7.

Monastir Tops Sahara, Kriol Star Advances

US Monastir have emerged as champions of the Sahara Conference in the 2025 Basketball Africa League (BAL), closing their campaign at Dakar Arena in Senegal with four wins and two losses.

The Tunisian side secured their place in the playoffs alongside Angola’s Petro de Luanda — but it was Kriol Star of Cape Verde who delivered the tournament’s biggest surprise.

In a dramatic final group-stage clash, Kriol Star shocked defending champions Petro Luanda, notching a third victory that sealed their unlikely spot in the BAL playoffs. The upset has cemented their status as this year’s breakout team.

“I feel good, I feel great,” said Kriol Star center Lewis Igho Uvwo (A.T.R.O.S.). “I didn’t think we’d win today, but I just played with all my heart. Big love to the fans, the people in Cape Verde, everyone watching from home — thank you for your support.”

The mood was far more somber for host club ASC Ville de Dakar. After an impressive start — including wins over both Monastir and Petro — the Senegalese team faltered in the final stretch, ending their run with a disappointing loss to Monastir, their fourth in the tournament.

“When I talk about disappointment, it’s about the way we started,” said ASC head coach Libasse Faye. “We thought we were on course for a great campaign. But we were caught out — both in results and in our game.”

With Monastir, Petro Luanda, and Kriol Star now advancing, they join Egypt’s Al Ittihad of Alexandria and Nigeria’s Rivers Hoopers in the next stage. The remaining three playoff slots will be filled after the Nile Conference, scheduled to take place in Kigali from May 17 to 25.

Source: Africanews

Harouna Chases BAL glory after five straight seasons

Abdoulaye Harouna’s name has become synonymous with the Basketball Africa League. One of the few players to appear in all five editions of the tournament, the Nigerien forward is now a household name on the continent — a remarkable journey from relative anonymity just a few years ago.

“In Africa, before the BAL, I wasn’t known,” Harouna says. “Yet I spent most of my career in the United States. Unfortunately, since I didn’t have a national team back home to play AfroBasket or AfroCan, people didn’t know me. But thanks to the BAL, now I’m truly known across Africa.”

At 33, the former Miami Redhawks player brings veteran leadership, fierce defense, and a reliable scoring touch to ASC Ville de Dakar. His presence is a stabilizing force, according to head coach Libasse Faye.

“He’s a player with a lot of experience,” says Faye. “That’s why we recruited him — to bring that added experience to the team. We’re aware of what he’s capable of. He can turn the game around at any moment.”

Despite his decorated career — packed with individual awards and stat lines to match — Harouna still hasn’t secured the one thing he wants most: a BAL championship title.

“All the stats, all the individual awards — I can say I already have those,” he reflects. “There’s not much left for me to prove. What I still want to achieve is winning the title, which I haven’t had the chance to do yet. I hope this year will be the one. That’s my motivation. That’s it. And well, it also feels good to stay and play on your own continent.”

But his team faces steep competition in the Sahara Conference, going up against continental heavyweights like 2022 champions US Monastir and reigning titleholders Petro Luanda.

For Harouna, though, the dream remains alive — and so does his drive to finish what he started five seasons ago.

Source: Africanews